Cinderella Amelia Lyons is a half sister to my 3rd great grandmother, Isabella Lyons Bill (1806 - 1872). Her name intrigued me, so I decided to investigate her life. Down the rabbit hole!
I had seen the name Cinderella before on a real person. See this blog post HERE. This is the only time I have found a Cinderella in my own family tree. The two examples of the name Cinderella I had seen were from the early 1800s. So I checked the 1850 Federal Census to see how many women and girls had this fairy tale name! According to Ancestry.com there were there are over 330,000 examples of this name in the 1850 census. Wow! And that wouldn't even include Cinderella Lyons, who was born and married in New Brunswick, Canada.
My 4th great grandfather, Thomas Ratchford Lyons, the son of David Lyons and Elizabeth Ratchford, was born on 3 March 1780 in Cornwallis, Nova Scotia. He married Ann Skinner, the daughter of Charles Skinner and Sarah Osborn, on 30 September 1802 in Cornwallis. Ann was born 9 May 1786 in Cornwallis, and died 19 October 1815 in Cornwallis. Later, Thomas remarried to Anne Griffin, the daughter of James Chipman Griffin and Sarah Harris, on 21 May 1818 in Sackville, Nova Scotia.
Thomas had five children with each wife, Ann and Anne, six daughters and four sons. Of course, the name Cinderella jumped out at me as being very interesting! I was able to trace her life under her married name.
Cinderella Amelia Lyons was born on 19 November 1820 in Sackville, and married William Freeman Newcomb on 11 December 1845. William was born on 18 March 1813 in Cornwallis, but the marriage document listed his residence as Roxbury (now part of Boston, Massachusetts), so he must have immigrated to the United States before the wedding. Cinderella and William also had five children, and their birth records list their birthplaces as Roxbury, Massachusetts; Cornwallis, Nova Scotia; Lewiston, New York; New York; and Massachusetts.
William died 9 June 1857 on Rainsford Island, Boston Harbor, and was listed as being buried there, too. This bit of information sent me down another rabbit hole, since I was not familiar with Rainsford Island. The vital records listed him as dying of apoplexy [probably a stroke], a carpenter, born in Nova Scotia, with no parents listed. After some research I learned that there was a small pox and quarantine hospital on Rainsford Island, which was also known as Hospital Island, Pest House Island, and Quarantine Island. He was only 44 years old, so perhaps William had been struck down by a contagious disease? There was no further information on the death record. There are no gravestones on Rainsford Island today, nor any standing buildings. It is a protected part of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park, being off limits from April to September due to bird nesting, and no transportation to the island. According to Find A Grave, it is estimated that there are thousands of burials on this island, with only about 1, 599 names identified between 1854 to 1896. About 350 bodies were removed in 1947 and reburied on Long Island.
Cinderella lived a long life after her husband died. She didn't pass away until 15 January 1910 in Boston. I found one obituary for her in far away New Mexico, in the Santa Fe New Mexican, 21 January 1910 ""Death of Mrs. C. A. Newcomb - Mrs. Cinderella Amelia Newcomb, mother of Judge William H. Newcomb, and Mrs. H. H. Betts of Silver City, died last week at Boston, Massachusetts, in her ninetieth year." Despite being a widow with five children, and her husband being only a carpenter, her children did well in life. Two lived in Massachusetts, one married the judge and removed to Silver City, New Mexico, and two unmarried daughters removed to Los Angeles and were buried at the prestigious Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.
Cinderella is buried at the Mount Hope Cemetery in Boston. I hope to find and photograph her tombstone when the weather improves.
For the truly curious:
Tombstone Tuesday - Alice and Cinderella, 2012: https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2012/10/tombstone-tuesday-alice-and-cinderella.html
Surname Saturday - Lyons, 2013:
https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2013/08/surname-saturday-lyons-loyalists-from.html
A book about Rainsford Island, free and readable on Internet Archive "Rainsford Island: A Boston Harbor Case Study in Public Neglect and Private Activism" by William A. McEvoy and Robin Hazard Ray, 2019: https://archive.org/details/rainsfordislandb00mcev_0
----------------------To cite/link to this blog post: Heather Wilkinson Rojo, "Cinderella Amelia (Lyons) Newcomb (1820 - 1910)", Nutfield Genealogy, posted May 2, 2023, ( https://nutfieldgenealogy.blogspot.com/2023/05/cinderella-amelia-lyons-newcomb-1820.html: accessed [access date]).
Hi Heather, one of our TIARA members wrote a book about Rainsford Island, it's available on the Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/rainsfordislandb00mcev_0 for free, you might find it interesting. Also, enjoyed the weather vanes on Chronicle!
ReplyDeleteI just found your comment, which was almost deleted as spam! Thanks for commenting, and for watching the weathervane episode on Chronicle! I'm adding the link to the book about Rainsford Island to the blog post so that it is "clickable". Thanks so much for the link!
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